I've got a little server in the attic doing router, firewall, file serving type duties. Currently has two Seagate ST3250623A-RK Barracuda drives mirrored. I was interested in what power consumption they have, from the Seagate stats page all that can be gleaned is: "Maximum start current, DC 2.80 amps". So if my basic physics memory serve me correctly, that's a max of 33.6W per drive (I presume they're on 12V yes). Quite a lot really, but that doesn't give a real world indication for general read/write/idle usage. I don't fancy pulling a drive out of the raid and measuring watts, too much hassle. Is there any other stats about I could consult?

Obviously I could swap in a couple of laptop drives, the Western Digital Scorpio in my desktop comes in with a max of 3W, but its gonna be money and hassle to swap to a pair of them. So I'll probably look more into getting Linux to hit the disks less often, less regular log file updates, /tmp in a ramdisk, etc...

Max power is much higher than power after spinup to nominal RPMs. It won't use that max power for even a quarter of a second.

the image below is from a seagate document about a server class scsi hard drive but the image conveys an important concept or two.

Note the power spike is almost totally gone well before the drive is considered fully "ready" for normal use stats. The drive will attempt to execute commands asap, they just don't guarantee it will do so in x seconds.

There is no reason to go to laptop drives with the Greenpower drives having so much better price per GB and still being low power and reasonably quiet.

But hey really the Seagates you have aren't that terribly bad in the power department if they are reading or writing. It's only the idle power draw that a "green" drive really shines vs the old drives you have.

_________________.Please put a country in your profile if you haven't already.This site is international but I'll assume you are in the US if you don't tell me otherwise.RAID levels thread http://www.silentpcreview.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=388987

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